f fi A j K3K""Bl'KG. CAMBRIA CO., FA. VR'DVY. - - - J A X V A n Y 16. 1 1. tI nOlRATIC kTtTE E XTKA I. COW. 9IITTEC II r A IKjr A HTTW r-1 PtMCK RATU- TATE CR.NTKAI. CoVMIT PhiLADKLl HIA. January 1, lrtl. j The Ienirratic State Central Commit tee of Icnt!ylvauia will meet at the Bol ton House. Harricbiirg-. Pa., on Wednesday, January 11, at I o"click, r. m., for the run-e of clortinfr a Chairman and IVr-Ti).in-iit Secretary and to transact such oth-f-r 1 i'Michs as mar properly come before it. l!sjAMix M. Neap, .Iamks Kerr, Secretary. Chairman. A FT. EE tlui Senate. lav. coinage hill was p;tsel hy at Washington, on Wednos- A MU. -nsioning General CiLter's widow at the rate of $100 p r month w:is intrhi-l in the S-uate on Mon d.v. The California Legislature in joint l .-sion on Wednesday formally dechiretl lit-Lir.d Stanford elect"d to the United SiHii-s S-nate to ufe-d hismelf. In the Senate the Idaho Senators drew l;ill ts for the terms of service, with the rtT-ult tiiat Senator Shoup secured the long term and Senator MeOonnell tlc fchort term. Pxcithment was caustil in Welling ton on Tuesday night by a false alarm cf tire sounded from the box in the White House. It is supposed that the wires lecanie crossed with the electric light wires, The lntcet advices from the Pine Ridge Agency indicate that the Indians are about to surrender. General Miles is pleased with the disjosition manifest ed and proposes to give the Indians sev eral davs to consider the matter. R. V. Belt Assistant Commissioner .f Indian Affairs, has leen direc ted by the Secretary of the Interior to proceed to the Indian Territory and superintend the payment to the Creek Xation of the $4 x ,( HI au tin .rized by the last Congress. A certificate of ineorjK)ration was filed in Springfield, Illinois, on Tuesday, by the Burton Columbian Tower Com pany, to build a tower 1,4'.2 feet high, commemorative of the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus capital stock, $1,(XH.,(K0. The largest republic in the world and the only one in the world tliat has ever lived a century on a purely Democratic basis is the I'nited States of America, which contains. 3,200, (Ml square miles, King almost equal in extent to Europe, which has fifty-nine kingdoms, empires, principalities and republics. State Sen ator Wiios, of Columbns, Ohio, has a letter from his son, Jeanne Wilson, second lieutenant in the Second artillery, stationed in the West, in which the lieutenant denounces in the severest terms the government Indian agents. "These agents," he says, "are a set of scoundrels, and the Indian bureau ii rotten from top to liottom." According to the census returns there are but 241,704 Indians in the United States, all told. On grounds of econo my soiey, the Government might try the experiment of gathering the red men together and paying each person a lileml annual salarv. It would e much cheaper than the cost of the administra tion of the Indian bureau in time past. The name of William S. Hammond, Esq., of Blair county, is being urged by his fellow memlers of the Bar and bv the Republicans of Blair county upon President Harrison, as being a fit person to appoint to the vacant District Judge ship of the United States Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, made vacant by the resignation of Judge Mc- Kenna. Employes of the Pennsylvania Steel Company at Harrisburg have been notified that their wages will be reduced after February 1, 8 or 10 per cent., or to the oint where they were before the ad- vance in rovemter, isiy. That u . another example of the way ia which the McKinley tariff does not give the promised increase of wages to the work- ing-men. One thing it does give is an advanced cost of the necessaries of life, During the month of December last there were granted by the Pension Bu reau 9521 increase cases, original invalid cases, and 51i2 cases under the Dependent Pension act of June last. Tlie pension agents' fees in these cases amounted to f 236,y$5. At this rate j the fees of these verminous infestations of an unclean system would amount annua v to ?2.t43,S2U. When it is considered that the pension agent ren ders no legitimate service that the ex- eoldier could not perform for himself, the waste and inquity cf this annual swindle carried on under protection of the laws is at once apparent. Andrew H. Dux, United Suites mar thai for the eastern district of Pennsyl vania and ex-State Senator, died at his residence in Philadelphia Sunday, cf Bright's disease. He had leen uncon scious over sixty hours lx-fore his death. Deceased was lorn in Baltimore in 13U0. Soon after his birth his father, a nietho dist minister, moved to this State, set tling at Iewishurg. He served a term in the Shite House of Representatives ' and two terms in the State Senate. In 1878 he was the Democratic candidate for Governor against Henry M. Hoyt, and the same year he was the Demo cratic caucus candidate against Senator Cameron. He was appointed United States marshal in 1887 by President Cleveland. Tlie remains will be taken to Iicnishurg for Ixirial. After ull the lijl iinatio veriape "f the oorrrpr.rwwju-e leHwitn .-ecrttary Blaine an.l Ix-rJ Salisbury i cleared away Fnyp the Sntlnvil 7V'iocmf we get jut alout thus f-r the net result. Enclanl will not admit that we Dave exclusive n;,"" w iximuS will n a.lniit that that is a "dowd sea. Ikit England L perfectly willing to enter into an arrangement for the protection of se-.iL- from extenuation. Mr. Blaine replies that we have a right to eserci.se exclusive jurisdiction over Behring S-a, if we want to; hut we don't assert the "cled i-ra" theory, and we are willing to arbitrate for the preservation of the geals from indLrerininate slaughter. So the war with England i jiratpned. Thu pet u hark to where Mr, Buy ani liad to lnr the matter, lie took no stock in the '"closctl pea" theory, and was opr-iscd to the capture of British toilers and .scvureu uie rvn..ue , 1 .1 . I of them, lie rimilv aiorted that if everyNaly hunted teals proniLouly thev wouldn't hu?t three years, and he prof! tliat we and England, Germany, Ru.-ia, ami Japan should enter into a joint agreement for the protection and rerr-tuution of the sctd fisheries. Trie m a other 5ations concerned readily assent ed to this, and then Mr. Blaine came along and asserted the ..closed sea" the- orv and rejected arbitration. Lord Sal- ?hiiry retorted tliat the "closed Sea tbeorv would never 1 admitted, and that if, in the application of that theory. English sealers were molested England would fieht. Then there was a brief lull in the correspondence, after which Mr. Blaine writes at interminable length that the evidence in favor of the "closed sea" theory is overwhelming, lul that our Government does not assert that the- cry, ami never tun, ana wnne it reinses to submit tweedledum to arlitration it is willing to arbitrate tweedledee. And having fallen back on Mr. BAy ard's position, Mr. Blaine concludes by quoting, as the lest expression of liU sentiments, a passage from one of the dispatches of Mr. Phelps, Minister to England under President Cleveland, They have a fine muddle in Nebraska. There are three men trying to fill the of fice of Governor. The Alliance mem bers of the legislature refused to recog nize the Lieutenant Governor as the presiding officer and tried to prevent the canvass of the returns for State officers An appeal to the Supreme Court result ed in the issue of an order to the Speak er to canvass the returns, lnti was finally done, and the Democratic candi date for Governor, Boyd, and the full Republican ticket, with one exception, declared elected. 1 tiese officers were immediately sworn in. Towers, the Farmers' Alliance candidate, was de clared elected by the Farmers' Alliance meni!ers, who have a majority of the Legislature, and he took the oath of of fice and it is said the legislature will recognize him as Governor. Ex-Gov ernor Thayer, Republican maintain that while Boyd, Democrat, has receiv ed a plurality of the vote canvassed, he in not eligible according to the destitu tion, and declines for that reason to give up the chair of Suite. The Pittsburg 7mjkica, one of the U-st newspapers in the United States will soon od-upv its new granite nre-proot building on the corner rf IHamond and Sniithfield streets in that city, where with everv facility tliat the inventiv genius of man can supply for the re quirements of a newspaper plant of the present day, it will daily isue out the news gathered from every quarter of the glole. The IH.jMitch is a newspaper in everything that the word implies and as its facilities for newsgathering in the past has been marvelous it promises in the future to even excel itself. In its Iolitics it is independent Republican, discussing all political questions with fairness and expressing its honest opin ion without regard to who it may hurt, If you want to keep posted on what is going on all over the country, as well as in Europe get the Pittsburg Diqxrtch. Is 1S88 there were 4,000,000 bushels of oysters received at Baltimore from the Chesapeake Bay beds, but this sea son the receipts to the same date have ,allcn l,clow 2,000,000 bushels, while packing-houses throughout the State are closed, and from all parts of tlie bay I n . 1 ..a . M 1 1 1 rrl. . uksivq u cmiutHw ue violation of the culling law, and the consequent destruction ot the young oyster, is responsible for this condition OI things. The law is a dead letter, and a S"1 industry is being ruined, is ear ten years ago Professor Brooks, of John Hopkins University, uttered the warn ing against the wholesale depletion of the oyster beds: but the work has con tinued, aud even now the oystermen do not seem to realize the gravity of the situation. Recent developments in this city, Says tlie Mendrilk Mevmger, are of a na ture to modify the first impression in reference to the Delamater bank failure. There was general sympathy expressed tor the members of tlie embarrassed firm and there is yet concerning some cf them. But several transactions have teen revealed tliat will require a large mantle cf charity to cover, unless ex planations and restitutions are promptly made. The hypothecating of county orders after they had passed into the County Treasury, or had once been paid and other crooked transactions, are offense that cannot be condoned. Dk. Tanser, who lias gained consid erable notoriety as a faster, has issued a challenge to Sucti to sit down with him in Chicago during the World's Fair to test the matter in a ninety days' fast on water only, or, if Sueci prefers, to let the fast continue from day to day till one or the other yields the contest. contest ot this sort would 1 a novel one indeed, but why is it that loth Tan ner and Succi are permitted to run at large with insane asylums on every hand? . lndlaa War Aboot Orrr. ri.vr. RmtiE Agency, P. Dak., vw Ru.-ville, Jan. 12. General Miles de termined thir morning not to parley nor confer with the Indians, lie cent a menage to the hurtilen camped at the mission stating his terms, lie gaia tney nuiet come into the agency in Fruall cotiiuls. and e into camp on their - i . . -.. grounds near the menoiy inuians. lie would not otject ji tney ri their own cam;ing grounl:, but the Brules and the OgalUllas niwt not camp together, and mut Hihmit to the laws governing the reservation. It ig learnotl from otiuial sources that tins is-nerai Milt' tiniU action. If the Indians do not aocei't these terms General Miles will go after them, and there will l; a light. Shots were heard on the outskirts f lL.e iw"p iLlUA4,u.u-hut tlo-,wcre strav shots hml by me piCKCts. iiie Indians are at the mission, pii miles away, and Father Jutz made arrange ments with ueneral Miles ior a conier cTie with the chiefs this morning. It is expected that the Indians will come in ceh-ed the silver dollars it turned out for to-day, either as friendlies or hostilcs, a dollar's worth cf taxes due to it, and and tlie conference will determine which. jt nas tejt them at par with gold there Father JuU informed General Miles that i,v. WiUi free coinageof silver tlie Oov- the Indians were in a friendly mood and j inclined to come in peaceably. I Father Juu says the Indians i not I want to U disarmed, Tliw is the key- and the result would be tlie establith note of the conference. If General men t of a silver l-asis in this dJiintry, Miles says they will not be disarmed, "a instead of a cold basis, with such a re- peacable settlement will take place. A 1 plan has leen suggested to separate ttie I Brules and Ogallalas, and send the I B rules lack to their reservations and turn the Ogallalas over to Captain lierce. the newelv appointed agent, to be dis armed or not, as he pleases. Father Crafts was seen tins morning. Tlie venerable priest is slowly improving. He was asked what he thought of a peaceful settlement. He said: "The situation is very serious, and the Indians must le very carefully handled or there will !e more trouble." "What is the cause of tliis war, fath- err' "Tlie Indians have been starved and left naked; not this year only, but for years. The attendant advised the priest not to talk any more, as he is not yet out of danger. All of the hostilcs reached the mission five miles out last night late. Tlie troops are press-ing them closely, and have guarded all avenues of escape. The delay in arriving is due to the lack of transportation. The head of the band reached the agency at noon. Few of them are armed, having hid their arms in tlie sand hills. General Miles says the Indians are in bad shape, and have done well to get in as soon as they did. . There is rejoicing at I'ine Ridge over the eaceful outcome of the wax. Tlie Ogallalas were delight ed to get lsck to the agency. Tlie Brules were a little sullen, but now, as the Ogallalas have left them, they see the futility of attempting to fight. Tliat the war is over is the general opinion of all. - Dodging tlie Women. Ha RKisiiCKG, January 12. There was a li vely scene in the rotunda of the Cap ital to-night. Between six and seven hundred female applicants for positions as sweepers and scrubbers in tlie liall of the House and committee .rooms con gregated to learn their fate. As only about one hundred are employed the biennial gatherings of anxious women are generally followed by imprecations on the heads of disjensers of the posi tions from the unfortunate aspirants. As a precautionary measure Chief Clerk Morrison, who is the appointing rerson, absented himself and selected as his sub stitute to announce the names of tlie lucky iersons Ed. Householder, who has charge of the elevator. Householder, realizing that it would e perilous to make the announcements within reach cf tlie disappointed women, took his position in the elevator, mid way tetween the first and second floors, and as boon as he had completed the un pleasant task assigned him, rapidly de scended to the basement and escaped from tlie wrath of those whom he had not on the list. Although the stiiHpms and sweepers receive only haif a dollar a night, one of the applicants owns several brick houses and a large tract of land. Severe Weather In En rope, London, Jan. 9. Tlie Hamburg Un derwriters Association has urged the German Government to otficiahv de- lare the Elbe cked to navigation. The steamers Kaffraria, PlatesKa and Borkum have been wrecked in the ice. Tlie crews were saved. Other craft now in the river are in great danger. At Fiume and Trieste, on tlie Adriatic the storm rages with unabated severity. In both cities all tlie theaters and other places of amusement are closed, and the streetcars have stopped running. The blizzard is so fierce that it is dangerous to venture otit. Traffic is at a complete standstill, and the ttreets are almost to tally deserted. Cork, Jan. 9. Great distress exists on the sea coast, and many families are almost perishing for want of food. At a meeting of the Board of Guardians of Clonakilty to-day a large number of laborers forced their way into the board room, and declared that they were driv en to desperation by. want; that they had had no work for many months, and that their families were starving. The Guardians promised to do what they could. The Car Split fa Two. Pittsburg, Jan. 11. An electric car. crowded with passengers, on the Second avenue street railroad, jumped the track at the corner of Tenth street and Second avenue at 10:30 o'clock Saturday night. and feu over a trestle about fifteen feet high. Maggie Delehauty was badly bruised and received internal injuries, and Thomas McClelland had his leg broken. As the car was crossing the trestle at a rapid rate of speed it suddenly jumped uie tract, strucic a piece ox timber ana rolled off into an old metal yard, one end oi uie car ceing in me metal yarn ana the other end on the trestle. As the car ieu over n spui in io icugiuwiee, iuc passengers were thrown on top ox one Te new convent will be built at Anda another and into the metal yard. Some lurf not far from the Drexel home- oi mem were picKeu up unconcious, out thortly after revived. It teems almost miracukus that no one was killed, but extf pting the ta-o perstr mentioned the others peened to have tseaped mth slight cuts and bruises. Tk Flrat kter. Prrhap joa are ran dowa. eaa't oat. eaat loop, can't tfclak.eaat do aay thin; to yoariat Ulaetloa. and yoa wonder what alia yea. Ton boald hood tho waralaa, yoa axe UkiBg tho flnt ateii tat aerreai proitratloa. Yoa aoed a aerro toale aad la locUle BltUrt yoa will Bad tbe exact remedy lor rettortea; your nenrou jr Um to lu DorrnaJ healthy eoadltioa. SarprUto; reaalu follow tbe ot thl (treat tonle aad Al ' teratlre. Toor appetite rata mi. (ood dlwoftloa U restored, aad yoar liver aad kMaeyt reeaaio health? aetxa Try a bwtt'o. Prleo Seo. at the drag totei ot . Jaaea. tbe oi burg, aad w. W 5Ie Atoor, Loretto. LIght-Welgkt Dollar. , , , ,- The p,st .f the MUer c..nf:,.vcrsy lit , whollv in the fact that 41 2 J grams of tiilver'will not evil lor a dollar. If much rilver should L- worth a dollar j in i (H me pressure xor iree hivct innap.-. If m much silver shield !e -cth a dol lar the issue of bullion ortifu-atcs fur the market value of tL metal weald sat isfy tlie owners nf Uillion. , CHipjri-e that Congress shoH" pts law tluif" tKw yevVs of wheat should make a Uit-hel! Tlie injustice of such a proenxling would lie manifest. IJut the silver sjx-ulators insi-t that 75 cents worth of silver .hall le made to pss or a dollar. Is there any good reasn why the owners of Inillion silver should have Mich an'ailratitage over taei im ikts o wheat or iron? " " v" - merit itsi-lf has profitetl by the Iiriirentv between the market price of Filvrr bull ion and tliefa-e value pit upon thek-gid-teuder silver dollars L-ied tro!u the Mintf:. But tlie Government has re- t - rnment could no longer pay out" p. Id dollars for silver dollars. It'coukl nt afford to lose the difference in value; siting overturn of all credits and all tisiness as has nc occurred rin-e the f jvemment levied a forced loan uuon the country by making its paper notes a legal tender. What is the necessity for such lgi-.la-tion? rUU. liecord. A Wife's Crime. CJosheen, Ind., Jan. 11 Mrs France F. Calkins, a handsome and innocent looking woman, with leautiftil bright eyes, was married to Edmund Calkins, a well-to-do fanner, last April. Three days later she and a man named Frank Hendry, with whom she liad been inti mate before her marriage, induce! her husband to go fxwtting with them They returned thoroughly drenched without Calkins, who they said, had lieen drowned by tlie Umt iipHftting.' Tlie lody wras found three days later and the verdict of the Coroner's jury was "accidental drowning." Shortly after, Mrs. Calkins applied to an insurance company for the iaynieiit of a policy made in her favor by Calk ins. Payment was refused, the company sus pecting foul play. . Instead cf pressing her claim, Mrs. Calkins silently disap peared a few days later with Hendry. They were subsequently indicted by the Grand Jury't aiul both were arrested Mrs. Calkins in Xiles, Mich., Wednes day, and Hendry in Chicago Saturday night. Mrs. Calkins has made a full dinfe? fesion implicating Hendry. She gay that after inducing her hus!and to will her all his pmjierty and insuring his life in her f.imr, they Uiok him boating for the purpose of drowning him. They first drugged him aud then pushed him into the river. Mrs. Calkins has l-een twice married before. BvAh wcr brought here last night. . . The Ba4 Lands. Tlie Bad Lands of Tak ta, mentioned So frequently of late, in connection with the Indian troubles in the northwest, axe described as being compfed of a white clay, which, by the -ti-ms of rains, has l-en cut into hillocks. They are not high, s-Mom more than 4" or .VI feet; lait it is up one and down another tlie wholo way. Yni cannot follow the ' water dKirse, for there are none; a gully, 40 feet deep, with a foot and a half of mud at the tottcm, is the nearest ap proach to a w:iter course in the whole region. At every few yards you mut stop and, with spade and :-hovel, cut a path down the side of a hill in order to des-cend, and then up the ide of the one opsit in order to get up again. The mud is as sticky as tar, and in going a few yurxls the wIm-cIs cf a wagon lcome solid round cakes, and all the mules you van hitch to it will not be able to pull a foot further. Then tlie spades are brought and the wheels cleaml, tlie operations being repeated two or three times in 1(J yards. Tlie extent cf the Bad Lands in Dakota is prohat4y 100 miles from north to south by 15 to 30 miles wide; and if the Indians can find a better stronghold in this country the plainsman would like to hear of it. ' A Great Cattle Bange. Kansas City, Jan,' 11. Ever since the cattlemen have been driven out of the Cherokee strip they have been try- ine to find some place for a ranee that would not be too far from the markets to be available. Such a range has been found and a syndicate of mortgage com panies in this and Eastern cities has leen formed for the purpose of consoli dating the western part of Kansas into one vast cattle range. Tlie lands in that part of the State have been mortgaged to their full extent by the settlers and the ' continued droughts have caused such an exodus from them that the mortgage compan ies are finding themselves with thous ands of acres on their hands which they can do nothing within the way of sell ine or renting. It is understood tliat foreclosure, sales of mortgaged lands amounting to over 1,000,000 acre have been ordered in the western tier of coun ties, and as all this land lies together it is to be rented to tlie cattlemen, or else the financial companies will use the range themselves and form a cattle syn dicate. ' 1 ' ' - Yoa have iMard ynr friend u4 Blgbrt talkac ab t It. Yow may yaar-Mlf bm one ol thm maaT wo new mm peraoau expeneoe w joat W a how ood a tnlar it u. II jom ever in tm are of Ita mmki friend. I wnndarfal OjlBr abnat It la. that wbea one irtTa a trial Dr. KlDra Nnr Dteor bold! a plkre ia nm dnw. ii jam mmwm htrbn and aboaM bm afflictad wIU a eoaca, cold or aay throat, loaa; or ehect troobta, rwara a bottla at oca and tt a ia4r trial It la nntuki every time, or aaoacy ictcode4. Trial tteuiea. tree ai too ornar tore ei e jiao,u(iiini aad W. McA war, iorotto. hflvts h-n completed for the Mother Hou?e of the new religious or- der mhich being -formed by Sister Catherine, who was known before enter- i j Mercy Convent as Mis Kate Drexel. Philadelphia. It will cost 1nn nm n1 will 1- known as the St Elizabeth House. Highest of all in LeaTenmg Power. 1 1 - rv li V j(So I AESOUUYEDf PUKE 10T" William Sullivan, off Fairptrt. Xew- L , hinM A lVj-arw.M sir! secured a divorce b rittbur court a few day ao. , TweutT-on. d-er havn been killed fa Sollivau county turia the M-ason jast closed.' ' There are s.nri rr-sfsfe-red ir tie-in-phrak-ians ia IY-uayivaaia. . Three hua-dr-d of wUielj are wwicit. Orer 11.01 0 workmen were throw n out of work by the h nil in 2 down of the )lsl furnaces ia the Mahoning ami Slu nai.-po Valleys. An riirared -cow, iielitnc-injr to Daniel Keinmerer, of Alace, broke h-r hiiwl h-gn by falling, and with thetione rrtrndinir 1 Urolith the lWh 1ih w aikeU ti yards. 1 " Inthv anthracite coal region of Penn- WaW "pl.ty-Mx ht-oii tTv injured anJ two liiindr-l and e-enty-r?ve kiPeri otir?;rM. A Northampton county Tarnif-r who bad mioh1 turkeys killed by dujrs has made a claim ujxjn the School Jtoard for dam ages because the Itoard rec-lve tlie tax. An Italian has been arrested in Iltts burir for smindlina anothx- lie sold bis daughter for (IJ0. and then the young wo man fled with another more desirable suit or. The "table of the French Amusement Company, a travelinp; clrcii!, were btirnt-d in C Lira fro on Monday mornlnfrand twen-tv-five or thirty horses ierished. Loss Daniel Heart-k, of near Cambridge City. Iowa, it is N-lieved. owns the oldut-l mare lu America. She is -W years old and was purchased by hi in during the Mexi can war. William canaran, a wealthy you no: roan of Oakland, Luzerne connty. mas ttirown from bis slelarh on Friday uitflit near hi home and kiiled, bin neck having been broken. William Thaw, of Pittsburg, whone estate has just la-en settled. thonarht when he died one year ago to l- worth 93.fC.ntt. Thee Mate in f a- t-ald to sum :ip rwi.nnn.onit. cr? The larjrrt county In tho CnlK-d States i Cu.'tcr county. In Montana. which contain 3.0rn Vfiuare nil. l-ine larjrer In eitent than the tat- Vr nont. Massachusetts. Connecticut, Dela ware and Rltotie Island, It is estimated that f l..Vi.fpi will e earned hy the lumla-r Industry of Warren county and vicinity by reason of the recent snow. A small army of men will be. kept busy for some time, and the enforced Idl ness of last winter will be more than aton ed lw by the redoubled activity of this. . Jiule Mayer, of Clinton county, has refused to grant a liquor license to a wo- "ji. ii says mat wnnHu have no business behind a bar dealing out liquor to men. and tliat running saloons Is not their mission. There Is a gr.-at d.'il of truth in tliat statement, and Judge Mav- ers action win be generally commended Charles Cnlp and a companion named Miller started Thursday night for their 1 lumber camp near Driftwood. Cameron county. Tl.t-y placed a sprawl of a log in j ike slldo and then started down It. When I part way down a big log came thundering i down the slide. t Miller succeeded in throwing himself out of its way. but Culp was Mmck and lustantlr killed On Wednesday of lat week a child was bom In the family of William DewalU of Mononga'iela City, this State. Tlie child came Into the world possessed of only one arm. The father of the babe lost one of bis arms In the battlec.f Gettysburg. Both the child's and father's left arms are off at the elbows. Mr. Dcwalt has a large fam Hy. This it the only child of the family that Is In any way deformed. The lS-vear-old daughter of Iaac Hasting, cf Monongabela county. W. Va in tlie room warming a cloth with which to case an aching tooth, when her clothing caught fire and she was burned to death. -The family -shepherd dog. mov ed bv her screams, fought the fire like a demon, tearing tlie clothes from the girl with his paws and mouth until severely burned an4 the hair was singed off from many parts of the brute. Thomas Malcy. proprietor of tho hotel at the TVetlilehemTron Company Junction. who has been Incapacitated from work for eight months, was taken very sick Friday. During the attack lie was seized with violent spasms, and vomited a fish two and one-half Inches in length. He said he felt better and declared that he. was now- going to get well. Mayh-y is of the opinion that the fish was in his stom ach for eight months and was the cause of all his pain and sufferings. The tenporary depot of the Philadel phia A Heading at Annvllle was entered by robberson Friday night. They entered with drawn revolvers, covering both the telegraph operators, and demanded that they hand over the money In the safe. One of the operators sitreeeded In gaining the door, a t:d w as fired after by the rob bers without bc-lng hurt. The noise led to the robbers hasty retreat. They secured only eight dolars. This depot has been the subject of a down attacks by robliers and Incendiaries within tlie lat few years. Several weeks ago the depot proter was burned by incendiaries. " The American Harvester "Company Combine, which was organized a month ago with a capital of rvnrw.non. w as bro ken Thursday night by the withdrawal of the McCormick Harvesting Company, the During Company, the Whltman-Hames Manufacturing Company, and the firm of Warder. Itnshnell Jt ;iassner. at Chicago. The firms named withdrew, it Is said be cause of their dlsatlsfactlon with the line of policy mapied out by the majority of tbedirectors in the matter of raising prices on the farmers and the consolidation of the lateresL of the supply houses to the dis advantage of their customers. FarmerOeorge Wilson, who lives In i ranklin township. Heaver county, was ia Beaver Falls Saturday and told of a most remarkable experience three of his shep had -durlnjr the late severe tonns. The animal were mised during the snow storm the night after Christmas, and were not found again until lat Friday, when a farmhand d(xver-d them in a hollow where theww had drifted to a depth of twenty feet. A hole was nhoveled into the drift and the berp were rescued fafe and vonnd. Their hnnjrer had driven them to eat every bit t wool on each other's backa. They had aim consumed snch a quantity of snow that they tood In a veritable t-hair.her. The room they had made was twenty feet n cireumference and five feet hifrh. Th-T seem to be of preat Interest to the other sheep, who reooenize tbefr fel lows, but are unable apparently to ae romit for the entire absence of wool U. S. Govt Report, Aug. 17, 18S9. JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE ME PEOPLE'S STORE, FIFTH AVENUE, 0mceoa90 aos? for barcalat. Uaro arc a tow ol about. Jt will pmf jom Ue a lon diaioaee- Likl-Sa cie3 U ! piece Hal Wool IroM rroaa lz-c. to lae. 3M m iee r ibo wnm itmou a tx., woru J ot ol at inch t'louia la Ureysaad Bruwca. to to iea aar lor 3S? ( Irrr 'i (le-ea t'lai-ia aad btripM. M mche ld. oearty all ool. at Z'c., -worth Zie. to Vk. All Wool Plain ''lorC'lutL. S hxatMaarldo. a.ta mm. , . -; ,- Atwai ISC eee AU Wool wbmorea' all color. Vt ccota. wurtb a. .as at lio ia AI W4 PmmI ao4 atrtpco. ate,. BBatkea do a irota Sue. I.l &4 Ibch Homo All Wool ft -v.. (Barkra dowa from aie. (i-n iAi pMce black ab4 Wbl'O ltrera iooda. loehea wxlo. at Sw- . asarked dc-wo from Mr. FiO rti,r:i KuvolUca. eaoljo tyl-a. worta Mt to fi. new t 00 to Lu. ' ILA.NEU-T wicoof. t lBctea. All Wool Coasilrj i UDUU. PU11. irta. lc. all at '.Jn-. aarae4 down troaa w oiaj-ajo all wo'iaiii rumw aa aaau aaaiaaa im troaa aaaw- - . .i pioeeaFlDO AU Wool Plaid Flannel! at Tte monh 33e. A boat l-jo Moeoa Usevt licrBin AU Wool aaoois. lo Plaid. Strip, ote.. fur Ladlci Wrapper and Chlidroa' wear. at 3o worth auc CIjUAajS. WKAPS AU Jil KCTS. huth m?srjs AM) LtUB' ALL MAKKKll IAJWK. Abontao JachcU ai f were T.M to flO s. M JackcU al 10 au; 00 to 4a -OU. 7 KewmarteU at 4 70 1j.uo. -SO at ISu; U00 to !. . . 4 at W : - 1 M to 2u Ou. Wobarortlll a larse aad eaolco tock of orer l.Ouu caraeou tho Nawoat aad BeeiS'-Jle (ani jaft la tht wk la Jaekata and Wiak. 1 o make tai uro oouoaiuioaiy uia cm naeo tbee Irom U.ue to ti.mJ lo itaaa regular vnsa. llo.KilAl3 .U W in LtKI VtZrAHlJt O T. CAMPBELL & ODCCa. SPrXTlAI .( loa. Kalulag Yam la Black. per tkaia. Marked dowa troia Mue, carl ni vxjStixjs, PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER AND DEALER LN - 1 i Eekearode - -DEALERS IX- General IVlerchandise CLO THIJS'G, FLOUR' FEED, LumbcrandShingles. We Full and Complete. Give us a La 11. evem WATERPROOF COLLAR or CUFF BE UP TO THE MARK NEEDS NO LAUNDERING. CAN BE WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT. THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. ma--s-ly OVERCOATS I Plnthinrr ! UlUUIlllii TTo'no. fnm fram the Eastern cities lam now prepared to show you the largest and best Caps and Gents i anu ueous ruiuisum6 a t Y,rr a C11 for in? at prices that defy competition. Never before have the people of Cambria had such an opportunity of buying first class goods t such low prices. Call soon and convinced. C2 tt-wtMj '' 7 iiMSSiQUlCKiy MARRIED 8XPOLJO is on of the bart known city luxuries andeaontima a oak UBaadaahmiiiiuTti Oa floors. t&Ue and paintad work it acU lika tehann. Tor acouring p)t, pana and ni-tala it 1 no equal. Xfyow atotkeep" doea not keep it you should inaiat upon Lis doing- so, as i .1 wtt. HrM aatiafaction and ita ixnmenae aale all over tne United States makes it an almost necessary article to any well supplied store. XTsry-tbing- shines after ita use, and even the cbildrea delih, ia using it ta their attempts to help around the house, C . . , . PITTSBURG, PA. latcrott to Too. Plocty ot Coon to toll yoa Ooodi. good atyloa and colon, at 10c down , tor yoa 10 ao yoor raoppnif, ww wg bhih Cord leal, aad all tbe beat eolcr. Me. per lb.; S?. $ 4EWEtEH, Watches, Clocks . JEWEI.IiY, . SflrenrBTB, Mtacal Mnmti AJfD Optical OcodG. Sole Agent FOB THE Celebrated Eockford WATCHE8. olamMa tnd Freionla Watches. In Key and Steto Winder. LiAHGE EZLXCTION OF ALL KIND of JEWELRT always on band. 2T My line of Jewelry Is onsBrpaaed Ocma and see for yonrself before pcrchat D( elewhere. CafAU. WOU SrAIASTOD CARL RIVINIUS tetiabarc Nov. It. 165 it. & - Hoppel, f keep our Stockalw.-vvs CABROrXTOWN.PA. THAT CAN BE RELIED ON "Not to iS-joXlt ! ira'cxt to Discolor! BEARS THIS MARK. ELLULdlD MARK- f! nthincTl ii viy uiig) selected stock of Clothing, liafs, ,i cash. I can and will eell you Cloth see my stocs, learn pricey b.u Very Respectfully, A. SHARBAUGH, :AJtKOLiTuwJ. eizstrA. t - m VT'- JaW k THE PRESS NE'.V VOnK) DAILT. SDKJAL ' VEEET. C pajTM. I ft t y) !ea. 4 rt. or !0 j mK Ik Airrl Bteai Wlleoai Jaajra,a f f Mrirapal la. a yEwsi'ArER ron the f.ssE ' I vended' iMeeabor lot, jmrr. Circclatici : der : IDO.C03 : Ccma DAILY. . T7i Prt la tLeoran of 11 faction; j,uj-s ir' ; la uu aiuuuMkm hi avL-. Hit yf'-rf Tt'tnirf-'i'e .V-frTTr .s,,,,,,. In Srtr Y.,rt:. t'l tieww. wn!aar eialirt- and trjih Jirid Ml j '.ace in U? e4nrnrj rf 3 -r, , 'i-W .Loa lij(kktl trwijWiTiii lz" in 'cw- Vork. 1 1 yjiarv.le witE !.: rit. r , The Pr 5uiday Edition 1 a ;!ent!'d twenty prcotn every rvrrer.i telle of lnVeT'-aL. - IT Prn Weeity Ed!tl..n toutarL t.'l t!e jrnd thine of the Daily and jnitV editions. For lUw wLo t-aii not tlie Hailj or are in v-at-4 ijy diVu e fromeariy rercrtng t, the N'e-Wly ia aaple.-wl.w eu:ttuv. AS AX AU VEItTISIXa MEDIOf Tit PrtM La no superior lu "V YnrTu THE PIEaa Within Ok renrii of all. Hit Lrt ani i hcJifcl VfWi;fr in A m i-i. rat!- aiui SuiMioy. HM! year, - 1 BloiiO.. - Daily oiily, rn y-ar, - - - " fuur luoii ltr' - -KiLuriay. out year. - - - - Meekly, oue year, - - - - 3 if) 5.r XSt) S-id f-r n Prcm eirtular. SatjijjIi-s fr-e. Ak-uL wauv.-d i.iy. wdi'l. L.H-rl -itnn-'-"ions. Addreo.-, - - THE I'UKSS. I'otier iiuiidiax, I'ark H .w, THE - STATE - CAPITAL Watch the Proceedings of Your Legislature. The Ilaxrisburg Daily Pa triot, in addition to the general news of the day, will contain full reports of the proceedings of the Legislature during th3 session of that body. Send one dollar and twenty- fire cents to the publisher and get a copy every day during the session. The Weekly Pateiot is an ex cellent family journal and will also contain a report of the legis. lative proceedings. Term: 1 per copy per annum; to clubs of ten or more, 75 cents per copy per annum, with an additional copy to the getter-up of the club. Postage on the Daily and Weekly prepaid by the publisher. The Daily Pateiot and Frei j:a.v both for f 6 per annum. The Weekly Patriot and the Freeman both for $2 per annum. Vnmtn ! Ol Viirrrtta. ot womax. ao r.miX With buuac DiAnoko Roofiks to cov tm iTfc Wkv co so TJ.T riov Tm uw) or roc asil EaXAL-M tT AKtlXT COVLKS TK axKTH. Seed for iUuatratod circular to 3L Eiiret, Jil, & Co., U.33 "SVulinit Htroot, PHILADELPHIA. "Seeing is Believing." Aed tho beat lamp ever made, like Alad din a of old, "a won warful lampl" A lamp boolotelr lltlotlMUd O O- ttroaaawle. which irn o iiwr, ww, brilliant Mr hlto hebt of to eandU jKuirf Porer ond brifhter than gaa Ufht, aofter into oiocina Hint, saero cheerful tiaa oitborl That lamp to "The .Rochester. Aad with tt ahoro io eo amok, bo ant.!, to mmktm M no fltekorioc. no areetiaf. o clicnblao ap of tho kot. c taatrom nr annoyance of any hlad. aaS H never eeeda tnwimlcr. Ita founts (oil reaerroin) beter toulta roflod aoaenleea hraoa. with co tral OrwJt, it ia aboolwiolf auaJai-waahlt an aa a C4 a tmucnrcmniUi. . Only S woat mlA and oerr rte wiCJin JT IliM lavxa oa . Itaauat aoaGCXJD Urrp w maaa a oca toning oucewwa. for lamp nyna and later siajrto, " tho S.ochootor'1 hiaeo em torererl w anaaat ooea.oow arturttc woxiaejeo.-Horj"! Dl Table L.aaaev banqeet. Study. Vaa aaa - 1 kl.i. in Brent, rof oelala.Braoo. Wichotorwl feUc a Wrought lrea. Aah tho lamp- Sealer lor U. l-oca trade-wtork atoaapt "Tn Rorsaaraa. heaa aba mnu Rooboetor and tbe etyl T" want. Mir do lome-otor aa aoar. ocod for free lUaotrate4 catakue (and .Ir rrtee-liow, ond wo will bca and oend 7T lampaaiaiy bp aprooa, ricbt to your ooor- KOCSKSTKK. U.BF 0 ' J rark rtaee. How Trh. ZTwiort tnp Store a 1 Htvt DO YOU KNOW THAT Tor CAR stt'T Kooblo Barrel Hroerh lalli hot "- fS0; luuU tlitrrel Htnlt lxal'C '''7, 4 fcO; tiltrl Barrel Shot iloiii at fi'. other icood at equally low rreo. . i - a ai Avam a nu li a oa- IHamoauH, atche. tloeh aaS Jwe'r.T- K. SMIT. . SSS oh SS4 Utaerty Cer. Mwlt"" PITTSBURC, PA. fwnd for oar lar.ee aunoal HI"'"1' ,. lytrae. No. 1. tree ot oaaxKO. i r.BKNMtl KO. C FRIDAY. - Wlinn yon w atit irive this ofTlrc a tr reasonable. Mrs. Ann Kdwn 3ene of Ikt ihoiIkt EtKMinburg, on Sund yearn. , Mr. Fraiu is IUU was In town on M same to th? Fitr.EM crlbr. Mrs. Pr. V.rnill Sunday In Ewn)ti nts, Mr. and Mrs Cambria llonw. The Court on M M. Iao. V. Hoi merman. H. II. K Etirs., a 15ar Com- MUk .ToI I. Waltr. Wh Tolltow n. wTir fn-n forir vl.-ltliiR frlfi Tuesday. A brakeman u of AltHHia. ' In run ovit by a train, na, on Friday. 1l' and nnmarrl'-d. -Thtw llunearl at Braddork. and swer for tbe nnird was killed In tl rl on steel work on ' For falo cr re room in the En1--Will bo sold on easy pven on the 1st of A eubserllw-r for tenn Sheriff Stlueir: tho death warrant condemned murder f! dnrinK ihe t- weokn mnr on ean man. nenry C. MfTn Was lHdly sqneeo: an pnplno and the In Alt'xina, on M from the result of day. Mr. 1. M. IC butcher and Mo drove up to F.len-notwithstanding- tl went seven miles f turlnir honi. Lost. On tho bnrjj. and Ioreti' shawl. The finder trirt owner hy leavl' ble In Tiretto, or n In El nsbnrp. Tho largest tpcl nver recor oz raised by Saim county, IVnusylv centennial cipon Tudirer rtarki ment list on Thu Journed until Tl Jude Krebs. of CI day for the inrfos casos In which Jm In. Valentine Vlt bad lxen a resld past five years ai End Hotel, dnrlne Sunday evening nhootlnp hlmsc-lf t revolver. Furs! Fnr:- should remember t this plaee. paj-s tl Otter, mink, rexl skunk, opMWiiim kins. From 15 c for tkunk skins. Tho Eliensbv Opn on Monday, ton we'ks. It wi llson and E. E. C si ble will tie done the school suece. clpals for In form ii Dr. James i; physician of Alu afternoon In a hn maktnr a profess; nidd'-nly, and di- Thfl Coroner's In death from brain I Mr. Thomas two trf Clearfield braved the wlntr drove overland a rouph trip and Fkk f. m a n o ffi -e makn the return Jovernor lt Issued the foil Wllllaui West, W day, February Marsh, Cambria. Moss, Luzerne, William Stanley The collector be at the towns): ough of EU-iisbu 81st. S'.u NawH o'clock in the aft reicelvlna- the Hi 1 r ive rKT cent, a on ull Mich ii up In th caso , ' Vlto Ouadiro, Ii De-em.r sessioi With Intent to co was senteneod oi of one hundred derpo an lmpris penitentiary for months. Th follow!: elected directors Fire Insurauco C ty on Monday: 3. Hoppel, Jam Evans, WebsU-r H. Kiukead, Jol er, William J. 1 John A. Illalr. Mr. W. I. H. ton. accompaulu l'iinet, passed Tut-Hday. Mr. prlntliiK oflice ft "Hy. this count lour column par. be called the a bably appear ah Uauilng. TrU Hon. Dnnlcl -Johnstown, has law In PUtsburi. Inent criminal county bar "U rush of w ater h. partinlly para! l"-altli has U-n cld.l to remuin lwii since, tl.n Fork dam occun ICrook trout dlsiribiitlun fron LatclH ry at All thou Hand fry i to the nearest plication may h fonmiUKloiHTs: street, Fhiladel, Fifth avenue, y Lancaster; S. Str.nbT. Erie, bur.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers